From Polypragmon to Curiosus

Ancient Concepts of Curious and Meddlesome

Matthew Leigh

Contains a wide scope of research which is important to both Greek and Latin scholars

Shows precisely how Latin writers translated Greek concepts

An original approach which opens up new understandings of familiar texts

From Polypragmon to Curiosus

Ancient Concepts of Curious and Meddlesome

Matthew Leigh

Description

From Polypragmon to Curiosus is a study of how Greek and Latin writers describe curious, meddlesome, and exaggerated behavior. Founded on a detailed investigation of a family of Greek terms, often treated as synonymous with each other, and of the Latin words used to describe them, opening chapters survey how they were used in Greek literature from the 5th and 4th centuries BC, moving onto their Latin usage and relationship to that of Hellenistic and imperial Greek. Other chapters adopt a more thematic approach and consider how words, such as polypramon, periergos, philopragmon, and curiosus, are employed in descriptions of the world of knowledge opened up by empire - in discourses of pious and impious curiosity, in reflections on what constitutes useful and useless
learning, and in descriptions of style.

The themes which the volume addresses remain alive throughout the literature of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, most obviously through emblematic figures of human curiosity, such as Dante's Ulisse and Marlowe's Dr Faustus.

From Polypragmon to Curiosus

Ancient Concepts of Curious and Meddlesome

Matthew Leigh

Author Information

Matthew Leigh is Fellow and Tutor in Classical Languages and Literature at St Anne's College, Oxford. He is author of Lucan: Spectacle and Engagement (1997) and Comedy and the Rise of Rome (2004), as well as numerous articles on Greek and Latin literature and culture.